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  3. lemm.ee is shutting down at the end of this month

lemm.ee is shutting down at the end of this month

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  • frostytrichs@crazypeople.onlineF This user is from outside of this forum
    frostytrichs@crazypeople.onlineF This user is from outside of this forum
    frostytrichs@crazypeople.online
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/65824884

    Hey everyone

    We’re really sorry to say this, but lemm.ee will be shutting down on June 30, 2025.

    What you need to know

    As of now:

    • New user registrations are disabled
    • Creating new communities is disabled

    What you should do:

    • You can export your settings at https://lemm.ee/settings to take them with you to another instance.
    • If you’re moving to another instance, consider adding a note to your lemm.ee profile with your new username. Your old profile will still be visible from other instances even after we go offline.
    • Alternatively, if you want to delete your lemm.ee profile, now is the best time to do it, so the deletion can federate out before we go offline.
    • If you’re one of the folks supporting us with a recurring donation, please remember to cancel it (Ko-Fi donations should have been cancelled automatically already). Our leftover funds are already enough to cover our bills for next month, so we can keep things running without any more support.

    Because of how Lemmy is built, everything posted on lemm.ee will still be accessible from other instances, even after we go offline.

    Why this is happening

    The key reason is that we just don’t have enough people on the admin team to keep the place running. Most of the admin team has stepped down, mostly due to burnout, and finding replacements hasn’t worked out.

    The sad reality is that while there are a lot of great people on Lemmy, there are also some who use the platform to attack others, stir up conflict, or actively try to undermine the project. Admins are volunteers who deal with the latter group on a constant basis, this takes a mental toll. Please understand why our admins chose to step down, and be kind to the admins on whatever instance you decide to join.


    We know this sucks. We’re genuinely sorry it’s ending like this. Thank you to everyone who spent time here and helped make it better.

    – lemm.ee team

    u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)U 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • frostytrichs@crazypeople.onlineF frostytrichs@crazypeople.online

      cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/65824884

      Hey everyone

      We’re really sorry to say this, but lemm.ee will be shutting down on June 30, 2025.

      What you need to know

      As of now:

      • New user registrations are disabled
      • Creating new communities is disabled

      What you should do:

      • You can export your settings at https://lemm.ee/settings to take them with you to another instance.
      • If you’re moving to another instance, consider adding a note to your lemm.ee profile with your new username. Your old profile will still be visible from other instances even after we go offline.
      • Alternatively, if you want to delete your lemm.ee profile, now is the best time to do it, so the deletion can federate out before we go offline.
      • If you’re one of the folks supporting us with a recurring donation, please remember to cancel it (Ko-Fi donations should have been cancelled automatically already). Our leftover funds are already enough to cover our bills for next month, so we can keep things running without any more support.

      Because of how Lemmy is built, everything posted on lemm.ee will still be accessible from other instances, even after we go offline.

      Why this is happening

      The key reason is that we just don’t have enough people on the admin team to keep the place running. Most of the admin team has stepped down, mostly due to burnout, and finding replacements hasn’t worked out.

      The sad reality is that while there are a lot of great people on Lemmy, there are also some who use the platform to attack others, stir up conflict, or actively try to undermine the project. Admins are volunteers who deal with the latter group on a constant basis, this takes a mental toll. Please understand why our admins chose to step down, and be kind to the admins on whatever instance you decide to join.


      We know this sucks. We’re genuinely sorry it’s ending like this. Thank you to everyone who spent time here and helped make it better.

      – lemm.ee team

      u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)U This user is from outside of this forum
      u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)U This user is from outside of this forum
      u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      Holy shit, that was unexpected.

      johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)U u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)

        Holy shit, that was unexpected.

        johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
        johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
        johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        It really wasn’t, sadly.

        The site founder put in an incredible amount of work setting the place up (something like 10 support servers at US$200/mo), but also tried to be lead admin for a year+, and that’s typically an extremely tough double-job to do well on a big, popular site / place. In his various posts he sometimes talked about all the vile content and destructive users the sub-admins had to deal with on an ongoing basis, and it certainly sounds like that burned out the whole volunteer staff in the end.

        From my own POV, and something I noticed from the beginning here, is that in the wake of Reddit (and other places) treating its users as assets, it was important to grow a userbase across the Lemmysphere and Fediverse with a strong community spirit. To me that means more participation, more content-creation, and more willingness to be civil and cooperate. Not that these things didn’t happen to a significant extent, but it seems like a lot of .ee users and visitors, while willing to hang out at the place, were moreso just willing to soak up the content without putting in much effort to help make the place work. Or even just being toxic and destructive, as above.

        A lot more could be said and debated about the whole situation, but sites like Reddit, as draconian as they might be at times, and whatever their other flaws, have proven that they’ve been able to establish a system that works stably over the long haul.

        Me, I love the idea of the FV, and for that very reason have put in almost two years of hard work in to my own project on .ee, but I’m very unsure about the long-term healthy function of the Lemmysphere in particular. More specifically, trying to migrate my project to another instance before .ee shuts down would be a herculean task AFAIK, especially with my having significant new health issues recently.

        So, yeah. 😕

        rglullis@communick.newsR 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee

          It really wasn’t, sadly.

          The site founder put in an incredible amount of work setting the place up (something like 10 support servers at US$200/mo), but also tried to be lead admin for a year+, and that’s typically an extremely tough double-job to do well on a big, popular site / place. In his various posts he sometimes talked about all the vile content and destructive users the sub-admins had to deal with on an ongoing basis, and it certainly sounds like that burned out the whole volunteer staff in the end.

          From my own POV, and something I noticed from the beginning here, is that in the wake of Reddit (and other places) treating its users as assets, it was important to grow a userbase across the Lemmysphere and Fediverse with a strong community spirit. To me that means more participation, more content-creation, and more willingness to be civil and cooperate. Not that these things didn’t happen to a significant extent, but it seems like a lot of .ee users and visitors, while willing to hang out at the place, were moreso just willing to soak up the content without putting in much effort to help make the place work. Or even just being toxic and destructive, as above.

          A lot more could be said and debated about the whole situation, but sites like Reddit, as draconian as they might be at times, and whatever their other flaws, have proven that they’ve been able to establish a system that works stably over the long haul.

          Me, I love the idea of the FV, and for that very reason have put in almost two years of hard work in to my own project on .ee, but I’m very unsure about the long-term healthy function of the Lemmysphere in particular. More specifically, trying to migrate my project to another instance before .ee shuts down would be a herculean task AFAIK, especially with my having significant new health issues recently.

          So, yeah. 😕

          rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
          rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
          rglullis@communick.news
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          Not that these things didn’t happen to a significant extent, but it seems like a lot of .ee users and visitors, while willing to hang out at the place, were moreso just willing to soak up the content without putting in much effort to help make the place work.

          Blaming the community for that is not fair. It takes only a few rotten fruit to spoil the whole basket. Even if 99% of your userbase are model netizens who are supportive and only make positive contributions, the whole system can be brought down by a few dedicate trolls/losers.

          We need to build effective filtering mechanisms to get rid of abuse/spam and we need to maybe bring back the idea of Web of Trust. It’s too easy to create an account and start polluting the fediverse.

          johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • rglullis@communick.newsR rglullis@communick.news

            Not that these things didn’t happen to a significant extent, but it seems like a lot of .ee users and visitors, while willing to hang out at the place, were moreso just willing to soak up the content without putting in much effort to help make the place work.

            Blaming the community for that is not fair. It takes only a few rotten fruit to spoil the whole basket. Even if 99% of your userbase are model netizens who are supportive and only make positive contributions, the whole system can be brought down by a few dedicate trolls/losers.

            We need to build effective filtering mechanisms to get rid of abuse/spam and we need to maybe bring back the idea of Web of Trust. It’s too easy to create an account and start polluting the fediverse.

            johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
            johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
            johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            Blaming the community for that is not fair.

            I’m not blaming the community. Things are what they are, including human behavior.

            What I did was to state what I think is and was necessary for the FV to survive robustly in the long term, and in my opinion it just wasn’t happening adequately, at least for .ee, and maybe it’s a problem for the FV as a whole, too. You’d have to see what other major instance admins had to say, I guess…

            rglullis@communick.newsR 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee

              Blaming the community for that is not fair.

              I’m not blaming the community. Things are what they are, including human behavior.

              What I did was to state what I think is and was necessary for the FV to survive robustly in the long term, and in my opinion it just wasn’t happening adequately, at least for .ee, and maybe it’s a problem for the FV as a whole, too. You’d have to see what other major instance admins had to say, I guess…

              rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
              rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
              rglullis@communick.news
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              We can not change “human behavior”, so I don’t see how/why we should expect things to “be different at .ee” compared to anywhere else.

              johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • rglullis@communick.newsR rglullis@communick.news

                We can not change “human behavior”, so I don’t see how/why we should expect things to “be different at .ee” compared to anywhere else.

                johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
                johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ This user is from outside of this forum
                johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                Unfortunately, that’s not what I’m talking about, either.

                What I’m talking about is something like a sufficient, critical mass needed to help .ee (and any other place) survive in the long run. Two years ago I thought there was a real opportunity and possibility based on what the Reddit execs were publicly doing… how many users it both pissed off and motivated. That in turn brought about a burst of user energy, directly reflected by the significant migration to FV, which of course included participation, and at best, valuable content-creation, curation, useful posts & comments, and responsible moderation. That was a significant, known movement, and IMO a positive one, even if it wasn’t going to last indefinitely.

                As a personal example of a ‘motivated user,’ I saw the need for a certain community which was nowhere-else present across the FV, and decided to create it. Over the past two years I’ve populated it with 400+ posts, most of them in the form of mini-articles. Other people also chipped in here and there, and there have been healthy comments and subscribers to sort of flesh the whole thing out over time.

                For the most part it’s been a fun (if sometimes extremely frustrating) little hobby, but it’s still basically a one-man show, despite almost 2yrs and 1,210 subscribed accts. Point is-- at the end of the day it’s been a small project that I thought worth maintaining as both a thank you to .ee and a tribute to the FV as a whole. Lemm.ee didn’t necessarily need that kind of contribution from more than a handful of users, but as said above, it needed a certain critical mass to make it work across the server as a whole, and a minimum of posters contributing vile content or simply being disruptive assholes.

                At one time I thought community spirit (for what that’s worth) would kind of tilt things in a long-term sustainable direction. But it seems I was mistaken, and thus we have the announcement today. IMO I’m not pointing fingers; I’m observing.

                rglullis@communick.newsR 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • johnnyenzyme@lemm.eeJ johnnyenzyme@lemm.ee

                  Unfortunately, that’s not what I’m talking about, either.

                  What I’m talking about is something like a sufficient, critical mass needed to help .ee (and any other place) survive in the long run. Two years ago I thought there was a real opportunity and possibility based on what the Reddit execs were publicly doing… how many users it both pissed off and motivated. That in turn brought about a burst of user energy, directly reflected by the significant migration to FV, which of course included participation, and at best, valuable content-creation, curation, useful posts & comments, and responsible moderation. That was a significant, known movement, and IMO a positive one, even if it wasn’t going to last indefinitely.

                  As a personal example of a ‘motivated user,’ I saw the need for a certain community which was nowhere-else present across the FV, and decided to create it. Over the past two years I’ve populated it with 400+ posts, most of them in the form of mini-articles. Other people also chipped in here and there, and there have been healthy comments and subscribers to sort of flesh the whole thing out over time.

                  For the most part it’s been a fun (if sometimes extremely frustrating) little hobby, but it’s still basically a one-man show, despite almost 2yrs and 1,210 subscribed accts. Point is-- at the end of the day it’s been a small project that I thought worth maintaining as both a thank you to .ee and a tribute to the FV as a whole. Lemm.ee didn’t necessarily need that kind of contribution from more than a handful of users, but as said above, it needed a certain critical mass to make it work across the server as a whole, and a minimum of posters contributing vile content or simply being disruptive assholes.

                  At one time I thought community spirit (for what that’s worth) would kind of tilt things in a long-term sustainable direction. But it seems I was mistaken, and thus we have the announcement today. IMO I’m not pointing fingers; I’m observing.

                  rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                  rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                  rglullis@communick.news
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  At one time I thought community spirit (for what that’s worth) would kind of tilt things in a long-term sustainable direction.

                  Community is not enough. I wrote that in 2022 with Twitter and Mastodon in mind, but the same principle still applies for Reddit vs Lemmy.

                  Lots of people say they want to “stick it to the man” but very few are actually going to put in the work and/or money required to actually succeed.

                  KichaeK 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • rglullis@communick.newsR rglullis@communick.news

                    At one time I thought community spirit (for what that’s worth) would kind of tilt things in a long-term sustainable direction.

                    Community is not enough. I wrote that in 2022 with Twitter and Mastodon in mind, but the same principle still applies for Reddit vs Lemmy.

                    Lots of people say they want to “stick it to the man” but very few are actually going to put in the work and/or money required to actually succeed.

                    KichaeK Offline
                    KichaeK Offline
                    Kichae
                    Forum Master
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    Weirdly enough, community might actually be enough, but the Fediverse doesn’t really have much in the way of communities. As I think you yourself point out elsewhere, the Fediverse is lacking the connective tissue of shared ideology, goals, or even interests. It’s also both too large to create the familiarity that binds people socially, while also being too small to sustain itself off a donation model that makes sure there are professional admins and server mods. It’s too big to be a hobby, and too small to be a job.

                    Aping the aesthetic of commercial social media is a significant issue here, because form follows function, and the function of commercial social media is not community, but convincing end-users to be content generators. People on Reddit and Twitter are accustomed to an endless stream of input generated by nameless, faceless entities that they don’t give two shits about, with some celebrities and internet-famous people interjecting from time to time. That requires tens of millions of users fighting for fleeting attention from fickle consumers. We have tens of thousands of people who – as far as I can tell, based on the types and volume of posts – are mostly interested in consuming, not fighting for attention.

                    These are not the people who fund these kinds of endeavours. Neither group is – the content generators are no more interested in paying to get attention than the content consumers are to give it. So, without the firm social ties that motivate keeping the lights on, there is only burnout for the few who are willing to materially support the place, and gradual decay for everyone else.

                    rglullis@communick.newsR 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • KichaeK Kichae

                      Weirdly enough, community might actually be enough, but the Fediverse doesn’t really have much in the way of communities. As I think you yourself point out elsewhere, the Fediverse is lacking the connective tissue of shared ideology, goals, or even interests. It’s also both too large to create the familiarity that binds people socially, while also being too small to sustain itself off a donation model that makes sure there are professional admins and server mods. It’s too big to be a hobby, and too small to be a job.

                      Aping the aesthetic of commercial social media is a significant issue here, because form follows function, and the function of commercial social media is not community, but convincing end-users to be content generators. People on Reddit and Twitter are accustomed to an endless stream of input generated by nameless, faceless entities that they don’t give two shits about, with some celebrities and internet-famous people interjecting from time to time. That requires tens of millions of users fighting for fleeting attention from fickle consumers. We have tens of thousands of people who – as far as I can tell, based on the types and volume of posts – are mostly interested in consuming, not fighting for attention.

                      These are not the people who fund these kinds of endeavours. Neither group is – the content generators are no more interested in paying to get attention than the content consumers are to give it. So, without the firm social ties that motivate keeping the lights on, there is only burnout for the few who are willing to materially support the place, and gradual decay for everyone else.

                      rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                      rglullis@communick.news
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      It’s too big to be a hobby, and too small to be a job.

                      Facebook allegedly extracts $14/month of value from each of their US-based users, ~$12/european user, $7/month for Latin America and $4 from Southeast Asia.

                      If each active user contributed $1/month for their instance and $1/month for the developer of the software they use, the Mastodon developers would have an operational budget of ~$800k per month, the Lemmy developers would have $50k/month.

                      I don’t think that the problem is we’re “too small to be a job”. I think that the problem is that the average “enthusiast” is an hypocrite. They will profess their hatred of the business practices of Big Tech, but they will look for any and every possible justification to excuse themselves to contributing to the pool.

                      We have tens of thousands of people who (…) are mostly interested in consuming, not fighting for attention.

                      Sure, but what I don’t get is this: why is that people are absolutely fine with paying 10-20€/month (or $50-$70/month in the US) for their mobile phone service but expect that the server hosting service and software development service to fall from the sky?

                      KichaeK 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • rglullis@communick.newsR rglullis@communick.news

                        It’s too big to be a hobby, and too small to be a job.

                        Facebook allegedly extracts $14/month of value from each of their US-based users, ~$12/european user, $7/month for Latin America and $4 from Southeast Asia.

                        If each active user contributed $1/month for their instance and $1/month for the developer of the software they use, the Mastodon developers would have an operational budget of ~$800k per month, the Lemmy developers would have $50k/month.

                        I don’t think that the problem is we’re “too small to be a job”. I think that the problem is that the average “enthusiast” is an hypocrite. They will profess their hatred of the business practices of Big Tech, but they will look for any and every possible justification to excuse themselves to contributing to the pool.

                        We have tens of thousands of people who (…) are mostly interested in consuming, not fighting for attention.

                        Sure, but what I don’t get is this: why is that people are absolutely fine with paying 10-20€/month (or $50-$70/month in the US) for their mobile phone service but expect that the server hosting service and software development service to fall from the sky?

                        KichaeK Offline
                        KichaeK Offline
                        Kichae
                        Forum Master
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        Touche. I guess what I should have more rightly said was, given the level of contribution users have shown themselves willing to make, it’s too small to be a job.

                        But in the end, I believe people aren’t willing to pay because we look like other spaces where they don’t have to pay, and we gate nothing behind paywalls. Most people don’t pay for services on the Internet, they pay for special privileges and to stand out. And if basic talk and text service was freely provided by volunteers, they’d milk those volunteer organizations dry, too.

                        rglullis@communick.newsR 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • KichaeK Kichae

                          Touche. I guess what I should have more rightly said was, given the level of contribution users have shown themselves willing to make, it’s too small to be a job.

                          But in the end, I believe people aren’t willing to pay because we look like other spaces where they don’t have to pay, and we gate nothing behind paywalls. Most people don’t pay for services on the Internet, they pay for special privileges and to stand out. And if basic talk and text service was freely provided by volunteers, they’d milk those volunteer organizations dry, too.

                          rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                          rglullis@communick.newsR This user is from outside of this forum
                          rglullis@communick.news
                          wrote last edited by rglullis@communick.news
                          #12

                          Most people don’t pay for services on the Internet

                          Yeah, but we are not “most people”. I thought “we” understood if you are not paying for the product, then you are the product. I thought “we” understood that “Free software” was not a “free lunch”.

                          And if basic talk and text service was freely provided by volunteers, they’d milk those volunteer organizations dry, too.

                          This is also why I think we should flip the script and stop cheering admins that run “free” instances. We should stop helping admins who can not make rent and we should start telling them to start valuing their work and demand proper compensation.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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